Greetings to all.
I;m hoping for some real world exp. with these two lenses. 16-35....17-35
I;d love some imput on which to own for interior real estate images.
I;ve read many good things of both models.
One being old school, the other newer with VR.
Thanks in advance for any response.
Ken

The 17-35AFS holds up very well on the D800 (I know - I own both). The advantage of the 17-35 is lower distortion - especially critical for interior shots - and potentially lower cost. The downside is that it's an older lens and the AF motor tends to die and it's about ~$400 to replace. Also f/2.8 may not be useful to you if on a tripod for static shots.

The 16-35 goes a bit wider, has VR (only useful if hand-held), is lighter and newer (thus under warranty).

People will chime in with helpful info on the 16-35 - which is a fine lens for sure - and you'll have to weigh the pros and cons of each.

For shooting interiors on a tripod you can also take in consideration the new Tokina offers. They are affordable and IMHO a better option for indoor architecture.

Tokina 16-28/2.8 controls distortion a little better than Nikon 17-35/2.8 but has a smaller range.

Tokina 17-35/4 is quite soft wide open but stopped down at f/5.6 is sharp. Its advantage is the size, cost, receives filters and most important gives the littlest amount of distortion from the whole group. For indoor tripod work this will be my first option. For a general use I'd go for Nikon 17-35/2.8.

Having said that the best use for architecture is a 24/3.5 tilt-shift lens... but that's costly...

I chose the 17-35 a while back for two reasons. One is lower distortion, a no-brainer for real estate photography of course. Also real estate isnt the only thing I shoot so the 2.8 comes in handy for concerts, events etc. Corner-to-corner sharp, fast, silent, not really any more you could ask for in an ultra-wide:

If you're using a D7000, then neither. Get the Sigma 17-50 f/2.8 OS or the Nikon 17-55 f/2.8

For the D800, I would go with the 16-35 f/4 VR. That's what I plan on adding to my D600 eventually. I shoot mostly landscape and don't need f/2.8 most of the time. Also, VR is nice and that lens is cheaper and lighter (and from what I've read just as sharp as the 17-35, if not sharper).

If it were me, my choice would be the 16-35 VR. I've own this lens and used it on both FF and DX. It is a very good lens minus the heavy distortion at the wide end. And like someone mentioned, it is perfect in the 20-30 mm focal length especially when stop down to f8-f11. But let me throw another option in the equation. If you're going to be using both the D800E and D7000, then why not consider the Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8 lens? Although the 16-35 was my "walk-around" lens on the D7K, it may or may not be wide enough for what you're going to be using it for.

I had both and kept the 16-35 because when you set the 16-35 at 17mm it wasn't much worse then the 17-35 from a distortion perspective. Corners, sharpness and color better on the 16-35. I've since sold the 16-35 and am trying the tokina 16-28 which has the least distortion of the 3.

I bought the Tokina 17-35 F4. I had taken a few shots in the store with the Nikon 16-35. The distortion seemed worse on the Nikon @ 16mm than the Tokina @ 17mm. The Tokina becomes much sharper @ 5.6 than wide open. Seems to be well built and was less expensive than the Nikon. Another consideration was the ability to use a filter which is what prevented me from considering the wonderful Nikon 14-24! The only issue has been with auto DX detect on my D800. Sometimes it thought the Tokina was a DX format lens. Turned the auto detect off on the body which isn't a big deal for me. Completely satisfied.

This afternoon I went to the local pro shop and shot a 16-35/4 AFS VR against my 17-35/2.8AFS on my D800.

Yes the 16-35 is slightly better in the extreme corners at f/4 at 16mm, but by f/5.6 they are pretty much tied except for the really larger distortion of the 16-35. At 35mm the 16-35 seemed to have a bit more CA.

At least these two copies of these lenses seemed to be pretty darned close in my informal non-tripod testing. I'm sticking with my 17-35AFS and in fact will send it in for a complete CLA and motor replacement so that it will last me a long long time.

The rumored new 17-35/2.8, if it manages to be better than the old, seems like it will be quite stellar (and quite expensive I'm sure).